Möhre
Möhre

Reputation: 939

How can I reset a CSS-counter to the start-attribute of the given list

I am using a self-styled, numbered list. How can I read the start-attribute and add it to the counter with CSS?

ol {
  list-style-type: none;
  /* this does not work like I expected */
  counter-reset: lis attr(start, number, 0);
}

li {
  counter-increment: lis
}

li:before {
  content: counter(lis)". ";
  color: red;
}
<ol>
  <li>Number One</li>
  <li>Number Two</li>
  <li>Number Three</li>
</ol>
<ol start="10">
  <li>Number Ten</li>
  <li>Number Eleven</li>
  <li>Number Twelve</li>
</ol>

Upvotes: 29

Views: 24998

Answers (10)

Paul Schlereth
Paul Schlereth

Reputation: 1

The above code is a life saver. Quick modification: incorporate the attribute [start] into the CSS selector using the calc so that we can discriminate between which list numbers need calculating. Otherwise you have to set a start and a style attribute for every list (following the first instance of using these attributes).

ol {
    list-style-type: none;
    
    /* update using the css variable from html */
    counter-reset: lis;
}

ol[start] {
    /* select using "start" attribute so we only mod this increment */
    counter-reset: lis calc(var(--s) - 1);
    /* calc() is used to keep html attributes values coherent */
}

li {
    counter-increment: lis
}

li:before {
    content: counter(lis)". ";
    color: red;
}
<ol>
    <li>Number One</li>
    <li>Number Two</li>
    <li>Number Three</li>
</ol>

<ol start="10" style="--s:10"><!-- or set it right away to nine to get rid of calc() in the css rule-->
    <li>Number Ten</li>
    <li>Number Eleven</li>
    <li>Number Twelve</li>
</ol>

<ol><!-- numbers won't start from end of prior increment -->
    <li>Number One</li>
    <li>Number Two</li>
    <li>Number Three</li>
</ol>

Upvotes: 0

Doug Wollison
Doug Wollison

Reputation: 461

You're trying to do a list with custom bullets using the natural numbering, correct? There's a built-in counter called list-item you can use, you don't need to define your own counter.

ol {
    list-style: none;
}
li::before {
    content: counter(list-item) '. ';
}

If you set this programatically though, Chrome and Safari currently don't apply the changes without a repaint (e.g. toggle display:none).

Upvotes: 1

G-Cyrillus
G-Cyrillus

Reputation: 105843

You may just use the attribute start as a filter :

ol[start="10"] {
   counter-reset: lis 9;
}

Demo , but this will only apply for this ol attribute. You would need some javaScript in order to retrieve attribute value to apply, generate the correct counter-reset.


<ins data-extra="Use of Scss">

see this : DEMO to generate 100 rules from these lines :

@for $i from 1 through 100 {
  .ol[start="#{$i}"] {
    counter-reset: lis $i ;
  }
}

Then just copy paste the rules generated if Scss is not avalaible on your hosting .

</in>


<ins data-extra="jQueryFix">:

A jQuery solution can be easily set up :

$( "ol" ).each(function() {
  var   val=1;
    if ( $(this).attr("start")){
  val =  $(this).attr("start");
    }
  val=val-1;
 val= 'lis '+ val;
$(this ).css('counter-increment',val );
});

Notice that : $(this ).css('counter-reset',val ); works too :)

.</ins>

Upvotes: 19

Yaroslav Trach
Yaroslav Trach

Reputation: 2011

ol {
    list-style-type: none;

    counter-reset: lis var(--start-value, 0);
}
li {
    counter-increment: lis;
}
li:before {
    content: counter(lis)". ";
    color: red;
}
<ol>
    <li>Number One</li>
    <li>Number Two</li>
    <li>Number Three</li>
</ol>

<ol style="--start-value: 1;">
    <li>Number Two</li>
    <li>Number Three</li>
    <li>Number Four</li>
</ol>

You can use CSS custom properties (variables), see.

For example, use inline styles for list and add custom property --start-value: 1;. In CSS you can use it like var(--start-value, 0); with fallback value (0). If you skip this custom property, list will start by default.

HTML

<ol style="--start-value: 1;">
    <li>Number Two</li>
    <li>Number Three</li>
    <li>Number Four</li>
</ol>

CSS

ol {
    list-style-type: none;

    counter-reset: lis var(--start-value, 0);
}
li {
    counter-increment: lis;
}
li:before {
    content: counter(lis)". ";
    color: red;
}

Upvotes: 6

Duc Manh Nguyen
Duc Manh Nguyen

Reputation: 796

My solution is: add class no-reset. It's worked for me!

<ol>
    <li>Number One</li>
    <li>Number Two</li>
    <li>Number Three</li>
</ol>
<ol start="10" class="no-reset">
    <li>Number Ten</li>
    <li>Number Eleven</li>
    <li>Number Twelve</li>
</ol>

CSS

ol {
    list-style-type: none;
    counter-reset: lis;
}    
li:before {
    content: counter(lis)". ";
    counter-increment:lis;
    color: red;
}
ol.no-reset{
  counter-reset: none;
}

Upvotes: 0

BRN
BRN

Reputation: 161

I see that this is an old question, but I'm putting this here because it may come to help someone yet.

You cannot read an attribute in css counter properties. Instead, you could use inline css with counter-reset to define the starting number for a particular list.
(Yes, I know it is not a best practice to use inline css, but it can and should be used for edge cases like this one)

The first item increments the reset value by 1, so besides providing the counter name, you will need to subtract the number you want the list to start at by 1:

HTML

<ol>
    <li>Number One</li>
    <li>Number Two</li>
    <li>Number Three</li>
</ol>

<!-- NOTE: List numbering starts at counter-reset + 1 -->
<ol style="counter-reset: lis 9;" start="10">
    <li>Number Ten</li>
    <li>Number Eleven</li>
    <li>Number Twelve</li>
</ol>

CSS

ol {
    list-style-type: none;
    counter-reset: lis; /* Resets counter to zero unless overridden */
}
li {
    counter-increment: lis
}
li:before {
    content: counter(lis)". ";
    color: red;
}

FIDDLE (http://jsfiddle.net/hcWpp/308/)

[EDIT]: kept start attribute as suggested to address accessibility and progressive enhancement

Upvotes: 14

G-Cyrillus
G-Cyrillus

Reputation: 105843

Back on an old question i have forgotten about.

Nowdays there is the CSS custom properties that could be used , even then , it requires to add a style attribute aside your start attribute

Custom properties (sometimes referred to as CSS variables or cascading variables) are entities defined by CSS authors that contain specific values to be reused throughout a document. They are set using custom property notation (e.g., --main-color: black;) and are accessed using the var() function (e.g., color: var(--main-color);).

example (if the code is generated it seems easier to set both value the same for start=x and var(--s:x) to avoid mistake):

ol {
    list-style-type: none;
    /* this does not work like I expected
    counter-reset: lis attr(start, number, 0); */
    
    /* update using the css varaiable from html */
    counter-reset: lis calc(var(--s) - 1) ;
    /* calc() is used to keep html attributes values coherent */

}
li {
    counter-increment: lis
}
li:before {
    content: counter(lis)". ";
    color: red;
}
<ol>
    <li>Number One</li>
    <li>Number Two</li>
    <li>Number Three</li>
</ol>
<ol start="10" style="--s:10"><!-- or set it right away to nine to get rid of calc() in the css rule-->
    <li>Number Ten</li>
    <li>Number Eleven</li>
    <li>Number Twelve</li>
</ol>
<ol start="30" style="--s:30"><!-- or set it right away to twenty nine to get rid of calc() in the css rule -->
    <li>Number Thirty</li>
    <li>Number Thirty one</li>
    <li>Number Thirty two</li>
</ol>

That's far to late to be an answer but could be useful to anyone else from now.

Upvotes: 2

Nubian
Nubian

Reputation: 151

To support <ol start="10"> even if counter-reset was enabled in Firefox:

$('ol[start]').each(function() {
    var val = parseFloat($(this).attr("start"));
    $(this).find("li").first().attr("value", val);
});

jQuery script is based on Daniel Tonon's input.

Upvotes: 0

Daniel Tonon
Daniel Tonon

Reputation: 10412

Just providing a streamlined version of GCyrillus JS solution

$('ol[start]').each(function() {
    var val = parseFloat($(this).attr("start")) - 1;
    $(this).css('counter-increment','lis '+ val);
});

I wish CSS could read and use numeric values from HTML attributes :(

Upvotes: 6

SW4
SW4

Reputation: 71140

Simply add:

ol:not(:nth-of-type(1)){
    counter-increment: lis 10;
}

Demo Fiddle

You cant use attr in counter-reset unfortunately, but you can add rules to alter the increment amount.

Alternative 1

If you are going to have multiple lists, a more resilient version would be:

ol {
    list-style-type: none;
    /* this does not work like I expected */
    counter-reset: lis;

}
ol:not(:first-of-type){
     counter-increment: ol
}
li {
    counter-increment: lis
}
li:before {
    content: counter(lis)". ";
    color: red;
}
ol:not(:first-of-type) li:before {
    content: counter(ol) counter(lis)". ";
    color: red;
}

Alternative 2

If the numerical prefix can be anything, the below will provision for this:

HTML

<ol>
    <li>Number One</li>
    <li>Number Two</li>
    <li>Number Three</li>
</ol>
<ol>
    <li data-prefix="1">Number Ten</li>
    <li data-prefix="1">Number Eleven</li>
    <li data-prefix="1">Number Twelve</li>
</ol>
<ol>
    <li data-prefix="a">Number Ten</li>
    <li data-prefix="b">Number Eleven</li>
    <li data-prefix="c">Number Twelve</li>
</ol>

CSS

ol {
    list-style-type: none;
    counter-reset: lis;
}
li {
    counter-increment: lis
}
li:before {
    content: attr(data-prefix) counter(lis)". ";
    color: red;
}

Upvotes: 1

Related Questions